The F&I process provides us an opportunity to add value or aggravation to the customer’s purchase experience – choose value!
“The bad news is time flies. The good news is you’re the pilot!” – Michael Aultshuler
F&I process provides us an opportunity to add value or aggravation to the customer’s purchase experience.

The F&I process provides us an opportunity to add value or aggravation to the customer’s purchase experience – choose value!
“The bad news is time flies. The good news is you’re the pilot!” – Michael Aultshuler
Customers understand there will be a certain amount of time invested in the car buying process. The wait time influences their perception of the F&I process to the extent that it can nullify all of the other efforts to create an enjoyable purchase experience. If the customer feels we are wasting their time, everything goes downhill: customer satisfaction, profit and income! We must proactively get engaged early in the process to create a comfortable atmosphere, so the customer feels they are the most important thing in front of us. There are two major “wait time” areas that communicate we value their time and appreciate the opportunity to serve each guest in our dealership home.
The good news is that according to the most recent Cox Automotive Car Buyer Journey Study, customer satisfaction levels with the dealership finance process have risen by 8% to 10% year-over-year. They found that customer satisfaction levels reached 80% for those that applied for financing online as opposed to 70% for those that applied in-person. However, the process in-store still has multiple delays and many unacceptable wait times. We must change this, by embracing starting the finance process online, and by making the in-store experience more enjoyable and time efficient.
Many have acknowledged the path to higher profits is paved with a time efficient process. A great example is Great Clips hair salons. During COVID-19, the engagement of their online scheduling app tripled and is around 70% in most locations. Customers chose to wait in their vehicles or complete other tasks while they “wait.” Today, an F&I manager must be out on the floor or at the sales desk directing customer traffic, meeting customers, and acknowledging any wait times they may encounter. If a backlog creates a wait, customers can still have some of the amazing new technology explained or engage in several other productive activities. Our process must reduce delays, not create them! Setting customer expectations has shifted from the sales desk to the F&I manager. Those F&I managers who embrace this change and are proactive in engaging the customer early in the sales process will reap the benefits in the F&I office.
We all can, and must agree, that the quicker the F&I manager goes out and meets the customer at the salesperson’s desk, the smoother the process and the better their experience. However, some dealerships are hesitant to eliminate the “wait time” that is created when an F&I manager returns to their office to create a great menu, leaving the customer sitting with the salesperson. Every minute the customer waits for the F&I manager to return, their frustration level is going up, and F&I profits are going down! It doesn’t matter what we think about this process. The customer has spoken. And what they’re saying is, the day of making the customer wait on F&I is over! If we refuse to stop creating the “wait,” we do it at our own peril! Needs discovery should take place in the F&I office, not on the showroom floor. When needs discovery occurs as part of a normal conversation while their paperwork is being completed in the F&I office, the customer loves it. Unlike Great Clips, there is no app for scheduling when a customer will buy a vehicle. However, if we fail to create a more time efficient finance process for our customers, customers will find dealers that will. Because the shift in customer behavior is coming ashore like a tsunami.
Time goes by slowly when you’re waiting to take delivery of your new vehicle! When the perception is we’re not prepared, or we do not value the customer’s time, the cost is lower profits and customer satisfaction. The F&I process provides us an opportunity to add value or aggravation to the customer’s purchase experience. I choose value!
Rick McCormick serves as national account development manager for Reahard & Associates.
Originally posted on F&I and Showroom

A May forecast is complicated by last spring’s trade tariff effects on auto retail. Despite continued hard realities, many consumers took advantage of ways to bite the bullet.
Read More →
Iowa-based Coleman Automotive Group recently acquired its seventh dealership, McGrath Nissan, which it renamed Nissan of Elgin.
Read More →
Based on prices, reduced incentives and slower household income growth, consumers found it more challenging to buy new last month, Cox Automotive reported.
Read More →
Work to determine your specialized talent, because that fact will determine everything about your agency’s future.
Read More →
A growing percentage of U.S. consumers are open to switching and fewer are adverse to the idea, according to a recently completed survey. That’s despite the end of a tax break.
Read More →
North American electric-vehicle sales were down 28% year-over-year, a sharp contrast from global EV sales growth of 6%.
Read More →
April borrowing data shows that more consumers are bending over backward to buy vehicles, though subprime lending cooled off for the month.
Read More →
Recent survey data shows that the overall demand for auto loans is down, but the demand for subprime loans is up as consumers face economic uncertainty and affordability pressures.
Read More →
The Mitsubishi location moves from one Texas automotive group to another, continuing this year’s spate of brisk buy-sell activity.
Read More →
As part of its 2030 business plan, Mitsubishi's North America arm will soon open its first 'gallery' store in Tennessee, where customers can learn about the brand, vehicles and technology.
Read More →